William Wordsworth

                   William Wordsworth is the father of the whole of shebang of British Romanticism. In fact, the beginning of British Romanticism as a literary movement is usually traced back to Wordsworth publication of collection of poems Lyrical Ballads in 1798, which he co-authored by with his friend Samuel Taylor Coleridge. He revolutionized writing of poetry. He was one of the first poet to try to make poetry accessible to the common man, to write in a language that was part of "everyday" speech. Lot of Romantic themes- like nature and emotion - first find expression in Wordsworth poetry. 
                   He wrote the book Lyrical Ballads that kick-started the Romantic movement in England. Wordsworth defines poetry as the "spontaneous overflow of emotion....recollected in tranquility". There's lot of emotion, for sure- and lots of trees and flowers.
                   In his second collection of poetry i.e; Poems (1807) he develop the Romantic project of bringing man/woman back to nature focusing on the individual, and making poetry accessible to all. Wordsworth deems that the poet must link inspirational and emotional experience to an imaginative source of creation. He uses external experiences to inform and inspire his inner creativity: a connection between experience and reflection.

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